New Friday Notes:
notes for next week
The life
so short, the craft so long to learn
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Check out the NEILSA main page at: http://neilsa.org
THE LSA:
Hennen’s
American Public Library Ratings 2006 (PDF file)
Naperville (Ill.) and North Canton (Ohio) Public Libraries
repeated this year as the top-ranked libraries in their
population categories, while Santa Clara County (Calif.) Library
makes its return to the top after slipping to second last year.
In their categories, Cuyahoga County (Ohio) Public Library leaped
to number one from number four last year, while Monroe County
(Ind.) Public Library rose to the number two spot from fifth. See
the top 10
libraries in each population
category from 1999 to 2006 on Thomas J. Hennen’s HAPLR
website....
American
Libraries 37 (Nov. 2006): 40–42
Congrats go
to:
CE:
The next LIBRARY 101 is set for December 12th
Kid Safety on the Internet - November 20 9:00
- 12 noon Waterloo Public Library A & B - If you want copies
of the CD's you must get registration in NOW.
Fee: NO Charge, Registration now open on the state CE catalog.
You wouldn't let kids ride their bike/drive a car
on the roads & highways without training, why let them do so
on the Internet super highway?
Parents of Literacy Partners - Overview
March 19 & 26, 2007 -- Locations & Fee TBD
Parents are critical to children's readiness for reading,
learning, and school. Public librarians have a key role in
helping parents learn how to help their children prepare. Mary
Cameron will take participants through an overview of a
parent-training model that librarians can use with teachers to
train parents on early literacy strategies. A more detailed
training will be scheduled for those making a commitmentto
participate in the project at a later date.
Grow Your Own @ your library grants
PLA is now accepting applications for its popular ?Grow Your Own
@ your library? institutional scholarship. This year, PLA will
award nine public libraries with grants of $8,000 each to be
distributed to staff members who are working to obtain a master?s
degree in library and information science. One library from each
of the nine Public Library Data Service (PLDS) population
categories will be selected....
Great CE delivered right to your desktop!
Registration for YALSA's fall session of e-courses opened Aug.
21st. The session will run from Oct. 2-30. The courses are meant
to be the equivalent of a full day workshop. The cost is $135 for
YALSA members, $175 for ALA members, and $195 for non members. To
register go to www.ala.org/yalsa.
Three courses will be offered, full discriptions in New Friday
Notes 08/25/2006:
PLA announces new start dates for e-learning courses
E-Learning @ PLA,? the online education program of the Public
Library Association, will offer five new start dates for two of
its popular courses. New Planning for Results and Creating
Policies for Results will each be offered five times between
September 2006 and April 2007....
OPAL: Online Programming for All Libraries--And All Library
Users
NEW: Streaming Audio Preview of OPAL online events coming in
July (playback time: 6 minutes) NEW: Streaming Video Introduction
to OPAL (Windows Media Video file; playback time 2 minutes, 39
seconds)
FROM: http://www.opal-online.org/
We are planning a DEMCO Book Repair Workshop for
sometime this fall, Ken will still do a workshop at county
association meetings if requested and scheduled anead of time.
STUFF:
1)
Children’s Book Week November 13-19: No
doubt plans are well underway in your libraries for acknowledging
National Children’s Book Week: November 13-19, 2006.
Sponsored by The Children’s Book Council (CBC) National
Children’s Book Week has celebrated children’s literature and
literacy since 1944. The 2006 theme is “More Books, Please!” Current publicity materials and past favorites,
including posters, bookmarks, and banners, are available for
purchase at the CBC website. If you missed out on sponsoring
special programming this year, the website provides background
reading and ideas to grab hold of next year—or anytime you’re
looking for fresh ideas for children’s programs. You’ll
find recommended reading lists, literary awards, a children’s
author/illustrator directory, an online store, and more. Take a
look: http://www.cbcbooks.org
2) Arnolds Park Library Shares Senior Story: Thanks
to Sue Sup at Arnolds Park Public Library for sharing this story.
Arnolds Park P.L. makes a deliberate effort to capitalize on
those “teachable moments” when users need computer
instruction and the staff is right there to help. Sue describes
a very rewarding teachable moment with a senior patron who has a
son stationed in Iraq. “…We’ve been visited several times
each week by an older woman (Betty) who has a son in Iraq. He
asked her ‘Mom, please learn how to email me.’ At the
beginning, she had no idea how to get started. At first, Betty
asked that we literally do all the typing for her. But talk about
stick-to-it-tiveness! She quickly caught on and is now learning
from the library staff how to send pictures of herself and scenes
of back home to her son. We learn all about Iraq as we worry with
her and laugh with her…Betty is a joy to have around!” Sue submitted this anecdote to Renaissance,
a newsletter from the Elderbridge Agency on Aging. Nice way to
tell the library’s story to outside audiences!
FROM: Teh EyeOpener NWILSA
Washington Office debuts on Flickr
The ALA Washington Office made its debut November 1 on Flickr,
the popular photo-sharing website. Photos currently posted show
interior and exterior views of the ALA offices on the ground,
first, and second floors of the Pacific House, located at 1615
New Hampshire Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C....
Teens
vote for favorite YA book
Teen readers across the country voted Harry Potter and the
Half-Blood Prince (Scholastic, 2005) by J. K. Rowling as
their favorite book to take the number-one spot on the annual
Teens’ Top Ten, sponsored by YALSA. Stephanie Meyer’s Twilight
(Little, Brown, 2005) came in second place. The vote took place
during Teen Read Week, October 15–21, and gave teens an
opportunity to voice their choice of the best new young adult
books....
Mars to get its first library
The writings of A. E. van Vogt wouldn’t be mistaken for Giller
Prize material, but the late Canadian pioneer of science fiction
has earned that genre’s ultimate tribute. His 1950 short story
“Enchanted Village” about an astronaut’s nightmarish
mission to Mars (which appeared in Other Worlds, July
1950) will be blasted into space by NASA next August in the
Phoenix Mars lander, along with works by such sci-fi luminaries
as Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke, to form “the Red Planet’s
first library.”...
Ottawa (Ont.) Citizen, Nov. 2
Google
Book Search: A review
University of Hawaii LIS Professor Péter Jacsó reviews the
functionality and value of Google Book Search (GBS), launched in
2004 under the name Google Print, compared with Amazon’s Search
Inside the Book feature. He writes: “Time and again I found top
notch, ready reference sources in GBS with limited preview option
which are not searchable through Amazon’s SIB subset. . . [but]
beyond simple keyword searching, Google’s software seems to be
cognitively challenged, to put it nicely, and hinders access to
the content, which would deserve at least a functional and half
as smart software as Amazon has.”...
Péter’s Digital
Reference Shelf, Nov.
My
avatar wears tight jeans
Michael Stephens shares five things he learned at the Internet
Librarian Conference in Monterey, California, October 23–25.
One was to put experience first: “David King pointed out some
good and bad Web experiences, and he urged the crowd to think
about how users experience library websites [PDF file of
presentation]. He also called for a quick turnaround timeline for
web redesigns. We can’t take 1–2 years to implement these
changes.”...
ALA TechSource blog,
Oct. 31
IM
reference talking points
Chicago-area librarian Aaron Schmidt offers some reasons why
instant messaging might be a good tool for reference services:
“Don’t worry, people aren’t going to get mad if you’re
helping people online when they walk up as long as you explain
what you’re doing. Use those moments to promote your service!”
The University
of Guelph Library has already started
using it....
Walking Paper blog,
Nov. 2
The
10 hottest IT trends
The Innovation Lab in Aarhus, Denmark, offers its take on the
most-discussed issues in research, product development, and
service designs in the field of information technology—among
them customer-made innovations, geo-awareness, virtual worlds,
web video, digital product placement, and humanitarian
technology....
Innovation Lab
Many
young adults burning out on social websites
If you believe the buzz, the latest incarnation of the Web is all
about sharing, connecting, and community. But even as the
phenomenon continues to swell, the effort to maintain an active
social life on the Web is taking its toll. Some have grown tired
of what once was novel. Some feel bombarded by unsolicited
messages, friend requests, and advertisements. And some are
cutting back....
San Francisco
Chronicle, Nov. 2
Avid gamer Jenny Levine has authored the latest issue of Library
Technology Reports, with the theme “Gaming
and Libraries: Intersection of Services.”
PW’s
100 best books of the year
Publishers Weekly released its annual list of 100 best
books of the year, divided by review category and arranged
alphabetically. There are big books (The Road by Cormac
McCarthy) and not so big books (Now Is the Hour by Tom
Spanbauer), and books the editors wanted to call attention to (The
Unfinished Novel and Other Stories by Valerie Martin)....
Publishers
Weekly, Nov. 6
Library
Company celebrates 275 years
In November 1731, Benjamin Franklin and 50 of his friends started
the country’s first successful public circulating library so
that people of moderate means, the 25-year-old Franklin included,
could better themselves through reading. Over 500,000 volumes
later, the Library Company of Philadelphia, now a world-renowned
independent research library, is turning 275....
Library Company of
Philadelphia, Nov. 8
School
Library Journal Summit in Chicago
Joan Frye Williams’s keynote address at the School Library
Journal Summit November 4 offered suggestions on how to “Make
Sense of the Future.” One tip was on cutting out jargon: “Civilians
(those outside of the library world) have no idea what we’re
saying. Instead of ‘Reference Desk,’ put up a sign that
reads, ‘Homework Insurance: I Can Make Sure You Ace Your Class!’”...
AASL Blog, Nov. 5
30
positive uses of social networking + 1
This compilation (PDF file) puts
together in one place each of the posts on the YALSA blog in
October about how social networking can be a positive force in
teen lives. The “extra” post which really makes it 31 is a
wrap-up of the 30 days of posts....
YALSA Blog, Nov. 2
Library-blog
search engine
LISZEN searches the contents of more than 500 library and
information science–related blogs. It was developed by Wayne
State University LIS student Garrett Hungerford. The LISZEN wiki lists the
blogs currently searched....
Library Zen
California’s
Local History Digital Resources Project
The California State Library’s Local History Digital Resources
Project assists staff in California libraries from Modoc to
Calexico to digitize their manuscripts, photographs, and works of
art—like Marin County Free Library’s real-photo postcard of a
1905 Kentfield real estate office (above). The California State
Library pays for staff members to attend training on digitizing
artifacts, provides access to a cataloging tool, offers scanning
services for 200 images, and allows $5,000 for costs related to
each library’s project....
California State
Library, Nov. 6
Strange
maps
Map librarians may wish to take note of a blog dedicated to weird
and unusual maps. Recent posts show Flash Gordon’s Planet Mongo
(right), Greater Finland, Europe’s various North-South divides,
the shrinking of New South Wales, the United States of Greater
Austria, Europe fits in Brazil, Manhattan neighborhoods, Germany
wins World War I, and redrawing the map of the Middle East....
Strange Maps
Freedom
of expression: The Danish cartoons case (PDF file)
Loughborough University Library Studies Professor Paul Sturges
takes the distress and anger caused by the publication in a
Danish newspaper of cartoons containing satirical depictions of
the Prophet Muhammad as the starting point for an exploration of
the dimensions of the right to freedom of expression contained in
the UN Declaration of Human Rights....
IFLA Journal
32, no. 3 (2006), pp. 3–10
Comparison
guide to MLIS distance-ed programs
Compiled by Mary Thompson at the Ocean County (N.J.) Library,
this chart lists in-state and out-of-state costs, residency
requirements, credits, contact information, and application
deadlines for 21 programs....
Central Jersey
Regional Library Cooperative
The
World’s Fastest Librarian
The World’s Fastest Librarian is a short film (12:52)
following Mary (played by Bridget Zinn), a fictional public
librarian at the Madison Public Library (played by the University
of Wisconsin SLIS Lab Library) as she prepares for the World’s
Fastest Librarian Competition. The tongue-in-cheek film was a
collaborative project involving over a dozen library school
students....
World’s Fastest
Librarian
Chronicles
of Libraria
David and Daniel Ariew created this video (5:22) as a community
service project for the University of Southern Florida Libraries,
which are featured prominently. A parody of the Saturday
Night Live “Lazy Sunday” rap video, “Chronicles of
Libraria” has an antiplagiarism theme (with smoothies). As
Daniel says, “Where would we be without the library and the
powers of rap?”...
YouTube
REPEAT:
Send us an e-photo of your library
[flicker it] to post on the NELISA web site, we would like to
promote every one of our libraries.
Whats New blog - this
is for your use and comments. Let us know what you have been up
to. New programs, old programs that worked well, announcements,
changes in personell, all the kinds of things that many of you
share at county association meetings when you do your Round Robin
sessions (some do some don't). The link: http://neilsa.org/weblogs/announcement.php
Send announcements to Eunice for inclusion/posting at: riesberg@neilsa.org
Model Trustee By-Laws are at: http://neilsa.org/consulting/boardbylaws.html
LINKS:
Learning Activity Written Summary: http://www.statelibraryofiowa.org/ld/continuing-ed/learnactform/?searchterm=Learning%20Activity
LSA web site: http://www.ilsa.lib.ia.us/siteindex.htm
NEILSA continuing education http://www.neilsa.org/classes/current.html
NEILSA e-rate Consortia Blog ttp://www.neilsa.org/cblog/index.cfm
NEILSA monthly calendar - http://www.neilsa.org/ncalendar/ncalendarmonth.cfm
NEILSA web site: http://neilsa.org
NEILSA yearly calendar - http://www.neilsa.org/ncalendar/ncalendar_results.cfm
NEILSA Friday Notes archives at: http://www.neilsa.org/fridays/friday.html
NWILSA Blog: http://nwilsblog.blogspot.com
State Calendar - http://www.silo.lib.ia.us/news/calendars/2005calendar.pdf
State Library CE web site at: http://www.silo.lib.ia.us/for-ia-libraries/continuing-ed/index.html
USAC (e-rate): http://www.sl.universalservice.org/
DUE DATES:
County Library Association Presidents/Chairs PLEASE send Ken a list of
your meetings for 2007 and any spcial activities in which you
will be participating, such as county fair, Supervisors Round
Robin, Legislative Days et. al.
NEILSA closed dates: 11/23 & 24, 12/25 & 26, 1/1/2007 Delaware County Library Association meeting in Manchester on Tuesday, November
14th at 7:00 p.m. CHANGE/NEW
- November 16 2007 9:30 Fayette County Meeting West Union
KD
- November 13 - 19 - Children's Book Week
- November 20 - Kid Safety on the Internet
- November 23 & 24 NEILSA Closed for Thanksgiving
- December 25 & 26 NEILSA Closed for Christmas
The State Library's 2006 calendar http://www.silo.lib.ia.us
Traffic Counter available on loan from the NEILSA
Experts agree that accurately counting patron traffic with a
people counter is the way you can make sound strategic
decisions. With help from a Sensource counter, your library can
easily evaluate staffing needs, hours and more. With hard data
you can be confident that your decisions are based on facts not
guesswork.
If you are interested in using the counter, contact Ken at
NEILSA to reserve a time slot. If you would like to learn more
about how you can use the readings from the counter to better
manage the library and to explain to Boards/City Councils your
staffing/use decisions we can arrange that at the same time.
The fine print stuff
blog - Friday Notes 2 AT - http://radio.weblogs.com/0108327/
EDITORS NOTES:
"x" & "xx" are catalogers shorthand for:
x = See & xx = See also
Edited by:
Ken Davenport - NEILSA Consultant davenport@neilsa.org
COPYLEFT NOTICE 2002:
THE INFORMATION IN THIS PUBLICATION IS FREE.
It may be copied, distributed and/or modified under the
conditions set down in the Design Science License published by
Michael A at http://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt
COPYRIGHT
Please note: material found on the web should be assumed to be
under copyright and is presented here for purposes of education
and research only.
NOTE: If credited [via ???] or [from so & so] it is their
material and not covered by my "Copyleft" notice. Ken
LIBRARY SERVICE AREA BOARD Meeting
The public is encouraged and welcome to attend.
NEXT NEILSA Board meeting: Nov. 13, 2006 2:00 p.m., Clermont
Public Library
Agenda
- Approval
of the Agenda
- Approval
of September Board Minutes
- Approval
of October Bills
- Open
Forum
- General
Business
- Personnel
policies
i. Report
- Trustee
Council
i. Report
- Other
- AEA
Report
- Community
College Report
- Administrator's
Report
- New
hire
- Activities
- Other
- Consultant's
Report
- Update
- Meeting
Dates, Time and Location
- Jan.
13, 2007 2:00 p.m., ICN (sites?)
- Adjourn
4:29:42 PM
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